Voltaire — To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize
Saturday, April 7, 2012
American women of African ancestry are more likely than European Americans to have estrogen-receptor-negative (ER-negative) breast cancer
Research has shown that specific genetic variations in the vitamin D receptor (VDR) and in CYP24A1 (responsible for deactivating vitamin D) are associated with an increase in breast cancer risk — particularly for ER-negative breast cancer — for African-American women. When researchers compared levels of vitamin D in the blood of women without breast cancer, they found that severe vitamin D deficiency in African-American women was almost six times more common than in European-American women. The researchers found that African-American women with the highest levels of vitamin D also had a specific variation in VDR. Although this variation was present in European Americans, it was not associated with alteration in their levels of vitamin D. African-American women with the specific variation associated with the higher levels of vitamin D had half the risk of breast cancer compared to women without it. When the researchers looked in detail at the patterns of genetic variation for women with ER-negative breast cancer, they found that seven SNPs in the gene coding for CYP24A1 were associated with ER-negative breast cancer risk, and that two of these seemed to account for the higher risk of ER-negative breast cancer in African-American women.
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